Interiors

This Author’s Home Is Filled with Reading Nooks

Christine Lennon’s space was made for eating, drinking, reading, and living.

This Author’s Home Is Filled with Reading Nooks
Emily Knecht

Everything in Christine Lennon’s Los Angeles house—from the discarded carpet turned runner up the main steps, to the baby blue decades-old piano—tells a story. Pieces gathered, antiqued, eBay-ed, handed down, and DIY-ed fill up the space, which hardly screams Californian. Instead, its feel—one that gives off definite “lived in” vibes rather than “look, don’t touch” ones—could almost be mistaken for being located somewhere along the New England coast. Which is what originally drew Lennon, a writer and editor (previously of, you know, W, Vogue, and Harper’s), and her husband to the Hancock Park neighborhood.

Finding the home after years of searching in L.A. was all fine and good, but decorating it was another task altogether. While Lennon was searching for furniture and art to fill the space, the criteria was simple. “I wanted everything to have a human fingerprint on it in some way.” Although she does admit to picking up one Crate and Barrel table, but when it’s mixed in with her signature home-y high-low aesthetic (think vintage textiles from Etsy mixed with a 70s mosaic tiled table from 1stDibs) it doesn’t scream generic. Our favorite part, though? The fact that Lennon and her family 100 percent live here, they drink tequila out back by the fire pit (year-round, may we add, perk number 568 of residing in California), read in the modern light-filled back room, host dinners in their navy blue dining area, and cozy up on the peach lounge chair. In other words, they use their picturesque home for exactly what it’s meant for: living.

 


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“The first thing I did when we moved in was start collecting Kilim rugs for the stairwell, which I got on eBay in various states of disrepair (when you are cutting rugs together to form a runner, you can get stuff that's not perfect). Then I was at [a] party talking to Genevieve Carter—I had known her for years, but I didn't know what she did. I told her about the patchwork stair-runner project and she was like, 'Oh my god! I worked for Commune on that house and did the stairwell! I can totally help you.' So she came in and the two of us threw these rugs down and figured out what would go where.”

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